Temporal relationship between sniffing and the limbic theta rhythm during odor discrimination reversal learning (1982)
| Venue: | J Neurosci |
| Citations: | 13 - 1 self |
BibTeX
@ARTICLE{Macrides82temporalrelationship,
author = {Foteos Macrides and Howard B. Eichenbaum and William B. Forbes},
title = {Temporal relationship between sniffing and the limbic theta rhythm during odor discrimination reversal learning},
journal = {J Neurosci},
year = {1982},
volume = {2},
pages = {1705--1717}
}
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Abstract
The temporal relationship between sniffing and the limbic 19 rhythm was studied in rats during odor discrimination reversal learning. The I3 rhythm was monitored as rhythmic slow wave activity (RSA) in the dorsal hippocampal formation, and cyclic nasal airflow (sniffing) was monitored with a thermocouple in the nasal cavity. The training procedures required animals to perform a sequence of whole body locomotion toward one wall of an arena, followed by investigatory sniffing of stimuli through a port while otherwise standing still. Hippocampal RSA was present reliably during the periods of investigatory sniffing. Analyses based on the fast Fourier transform (FFT) demonstrated that this RSA tended to be lower in frequency and amplitude than RSA which occurred during locomotory approach. Other analyses based on the FFT were developed to characterize the nature and parameters of the temporal relationship between rhythmic sniffing and hippocampal RSA as a function of the dominant sniffing frequency during the periods of stimulus sampling. The phase difference between sniffing and RSA tended to vary linearly with frequency so as to maintain a preferred latency relationship between the onset of each sniff cycle and a particular phase of the hippocampal RSA. The phase of RSA to which sniffing was related differed across animals and was







